About 65 million years back, an asteroid or comet crashed into a shallow sea near what is now the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico, researchers said.
The resulting firestorm and global dust cloud caused the extinction of many land plants and large animals, including most of the dinosaurs, they said.
Researchers from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) have found evidence that remnants from this devastating impact are exposed along the Campeche Escarpment - an immense underwater cliff in the southern Gulf of Mexico.
In March this year, an international team of researchers led by Charlie Paull of MBARI created the first detailed map of the Campeche Escarpment.
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Paull has long suspected that rocks associated with the impact might be exposed along the Campeche Escarpment, a 600-kilometre-long underwater cliff just northwest of the Yucatan Peninsula.
As in the walls of the Grand Canyon, sedimentary rock layers exposed on the face of the Campeche Escarpment provide a sequential record of the events that have occurred over millions of years.
Based on the new maps, Paull believes that rocks formed before, during, and after the impact are all exposed along different parts of this underwater cliff.
Paull hopes to one day perform geologic "fieldwork" and collect samples along the Campeche Escarpment.